Citi Launches New Report on Global Supply Chain Disruptions
Citi has released a new report titled Global Supply Chains: The Complicated Road Back to 'Normal', analyzing the ongoing challenges in supply chains due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It highlights disruptions caused by factors such as increased demand for goods and macroeconomic stimuli. While pressures are stabilizing, significant improvements are lacking. The report suggests that corporates need to rethink their supply chains, focusing on digitization and local partnerships to better manage inventory and mitigate future shocks.
- Citi emphasizes the importance of digitization in supply chain management.
- The report identifies an eventual easing of supply chain pressures due to global vaccination efforts.
- Significant supply chain pressures persist without substantial improvements.
- The report indicates an imbalance of supply and demand as economies reopen.
Latest Report analyses the impact supply chain disruptions has had across multiple sectors
The report details the challenges that have emerged for supply chains as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and highlights the hardest hit sectors and what their road to recovery looks like.
The report identifies a number of macroeconomic factors that came into play during the pandemic to disrupt supply chains including supply-chain management practices, shifts in consumption towards goods, monetary and fiscal stimulus by the public sector spurring aggregate demand, the emergence of the Delta variant, and commodity shocks that have amplified other supply-side pressures. It also acknowledges the speed at which these disruptions have cascaded around the world.
The report goes on to say that supply-chain pressures are at a point where they have stopped getting worse; however, there is currently no sign of any substantial improvements. It argues that the global inventory system was not designed to absorb the highly uneven stops and starts in demand and production that the pandemic has caused, and notes that the ongoing global vaccination campaign is a critical contributor to an eventual easing of supply-chain pressures.
The report advises that corporates will need to review their supply chains based on lessons learned from the pandemic. Doing this will likely lead to a further embrace of digitization and electronic tracking of inventories and logistics, greater emphasis on long-term alliances and partnerships with suppliers, inventory management strategies that shift towards holding larger inventory buffers, simplifying supply chains and bringing them closer to home, as well as a reduction in global integration, as nations try to protect their national economies from the next shock.
The digital copy of the report is available here
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Source: Citi
FAQ
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